T DAILYJB E"-MOJS7DAYMAY28 1883. \ The Omaha Bee. PnhlldiP'l ivory niorulni ? , except Ban * y , The nljr Monday murnlntf dally , One Year. . . .810.00 I Three Months. ? 3.00 Biz Moutlm. . B.OO | Ono Month. . . . 1,00 I'HK WEKXLY U15K , pnblhhod every TKUMS POST 1'AIU- Ono Vent . $2.00 I Three Monthn. 50 81r Months . . . . 1.00 | One Month . . . . 20 AUEKIOAN NKWB COMPANY , Solo Agents In the United State * , CORHlSSt'ONDKNOK- Oomrannl. i ton ( rohtluR to Nown &nd Kditorlal matters rbould bo nddrcaaed to the KDITOB or TUB HIE. BUS1NKS8 IiETTEUB All Bailuon Iicttcrs nd liemlllnnccB rhuulil be &d lre > sed to Tn BM PDBUBIIINO CourAxr OMAHA. DrtvfU , Ohoclu and Po tolfioo UrJern to be mtulo pnynblo to the order of Iho Company. ' The BEE PDBLISHINB 00 , , Props , K. KOBE WATER Elitor Mu. INOKILSOLL IH ohoddlng galloni of tears over the cruel fate of Doraoy , 13rady & Co. at $50 a tear. will bo a big day at th < Beatrlco land ollioa. The Otoo sale li 1 kely to crowd the local hotels. IT would have been bettor foi Major NlckoHon'a reputation if hii wound at Gottyaburgh had provet fatal. JAY GOULD has boon rojootad by thi Eanteru Yacht club , but with thi finest yacht In the world ho can atanc the loss , if the B ton dudoa can , in Omaha continues t < boom , oBpoolally in the outlying addl tlons. Our aasoaaors will have plont ] of word in doubling last year's valun tionn , Mit , DILLON IB anxious to out dowi expenses on his railroad but the po litical corruptlen fund of the Unloi Pacific will bo maintained nt its oil figures. GF.OKOE B. MOOLKLLAN la being in terviewed In Texas on politics. Mr MoOlollan will bo remembered as i Union general during the war , whi was always igolug to do oomothinganc never did. T\TKLVE million dollars were pale out this month for pensions. Thnngl the reduction of the national debt li not going on as fast ai It was , thi treasury surplus is going more direct ly into the hands of thu people thai If It Is was distributed to the bond holder * . OUOOK has boon hoard of throng ! nnoffiolal sources , which report t Bevuro engagement with the Apaohof In Sonora , the defeat and dlspersior of a largo bind of Indians and the killing of thirty bucks. Genera Crook IB not much given to fighting with his month , but Ma campaigns al ways moan business , A Dwruurr court In Ohio haa do oidod that telegraph and tolouhoni companies hnvo no right to oreo poles in front of private property ovoi with the exproaa conaoat of the clt ; council unless the consent of property orty owners is also gained. Thi case will bo carried to the uuprorui court. A WASHINGTON correspondent speaking of the late reunion of th Army of the Potomac , declares that i consisted of 200 or 300 raon who hai boon officers in the army , getting together gothor and declaring how bravo the ; were In the war. It ia a portiuon question whether the Army of th Potomao was composed of officer alone. ALL sorts of rumors regarding General oral Crook's command are flyln through the press. Ono report at nonnoos a mutiny of the Apach scouts and another the m&ssaoro c the American general. Another re counts nn engagement with the hoi tiles and the annihilation of the wandering doring Jnh , It IB safe to Bay that n reliable news of any nature has com from Gou. Crook's command attics h cut off , U communication with th roar and plunged into th Sonora mountains. No novt la good nows. Dad news would hav traveled in dotall long before this i any accident had happened to th command. Basldos , the cordon c Mexican troops which are hemmln In the aavagoa would certainly hav learned if the American general ha suffered defeat or disaster. "Yon need have no fear of our In dian scouts , " wrote an ofiicor trlt Crook In Arizona. "All of thei leave relatives or families a San Carlos , who they kno will bo hootages for the ! good behavior , and they are as aoxloc ao the general himself to cover the 02 podltion with glory. " That la th altnatlon in a nutshell. If any mis fortune befalls Crook's command , ! will bo because of overwhelming ] superior numbers on the side of th enemy , not because his own troops an scouta are lacking in loyalty or thol commander in ahrowdncos , energy c soldierly ability. Another week wl probably bring definite tidings froi Mexico , which will convince al doubtora that Ueorgo Orook has nc lost his head or his Indian allies. THE AWAKENING OF IOWA- The vigorous appeal of the Davon- ort board of trade to the pcoplo of own , calling upon them to organize oalstanco to the nggroseiona and ex. ortlonc of the railroads , has already ouud a place In oar columns. It Is a aim-tempered but strong document , arofnllyproparedby loadlngcltlzonsof antorn lown , and strongly fortified by a ollcctlon of facts aud a Bcrlos of com' arlsons , which challenge oontradlc- [ on and defy denial on the part of the orporatlons. The charges made nro the old , yet vor now , accusations of corporate op- rcBslon and injustice , of wicked die- rlmlnatiouB and nonloas extortion In atato which pays an annual trlbnto f more than $30,000,000 to the rail- oads which blood her territory and ovy exorbitant trlbnto upon agrloul- nro , trade aud Industry. With local atcs double and treble those charged n eastern roads doing no greater bus- ness and with discriminations which orco each year from the atato a nnm our tlmos aa largo as that required to aupport the government t is no wonder that the people of ! owa fool that their commissioner ays- cm is a sham ; that their laws to regulate - ulato the corporations are halting and nofficlont , and that the only resort must bo in the people themselves , n whom la vested by the constitution , ; ho statutes and the decisions of the courts the final Bottlomout of a press ing question. Appreciating thla fact , the Daven port board of trade calla upon ; ho people of Iowa to prepare - pare for an energetic campaign , , o bo fought on the issue of controlling the corporations by just and efficient legislative enactments , [ t appeals to voters to organize for the collection of facts and the education of public Bontlmont. A convention late to bo hold early In the summer to for mulate the complaints of the poopk of Iowa against the railroads and to ontlino a programme for the fall campaign in which every candidate for the legislature will bo forced tu plant himself upon an ami-monopoly platform and will bo jndged no lose by his past record than by his present profosalons , This is the awakening of Iowa , But I Iowa IB aroused over the Injustice from which she Is Buffering , how much more reason ia there for action on th part of the people of Nobraaka. The local ratoa in Iowa are trifling as com pared with the rates imposed on the producers of thla state. When It costs a Nebraska shipper , distant lose : han sixty miles from the river , more 'or freight from Omaha than it does 'ram Chicago to Council Bluffs oi Pacific Junction , the shameful oxtor- lon of the local roads becomes appa rent. The people of Nobraaka and [ owa are being mercilessly bled tc coop up dividends on inflated atockt watered to fill the pockets of the Dll ons and the Amos' , the Forbes' anc the MltchellB aud Vandorbllts. Witt ; ho power to redress their wrongi lying in their own hands our produo era will have only themselves to blame If they fall to apply the remedy. WHAT Is the matter with the oltj conuctl , and why do they delay li passing an ordinance for the creation of an inspector , whoso duty it shal bo to sco that all connections with oui water and gaa malna and our BOWOI pipes are done in a workmanlike manner nor and under official supervision1 A serious bronk in the water mail haa already made ita appearance undo : the asphalt pavement on Douglai street and the water la oozing from thi surface and trickling along the gutters A deep depression shows that thi earth and coucroto underneath thi pavement have been undermined This would never hayo occurred if thi joint had boon properly made at thi first connection. Now that the ontln central portion is to bo paved thi summer , the council ought to los no time in providing agalna the recurrence of such 01 accident by drafting an ordinance lik those which are In operation In othe cities. This ordinance ought to pro vide that no cut shall bo made in an ; pavement by the qas or water com pany or by any private party until deposit of money shall have boon mad to cover the cost of repair and luspoc tion by an official Inspector of the clt ; who shall be paid for the tlmo expended ponded In supervising such work , ou of the sum deposited with the boar of public works. That would aoonr the proper relaying of the pavcmon In all coses without cost to the city which cannot make itaolf rospousibl ior the damage done to its proport ; through the carelessness or neglect o private corporations , Oun esteemed contemporaries , th / ? fbfi'cW and ITeraW , are aocuslni each other of printing atalo dlapatohc and changing the dates to docelvo thi public. This shows a sad otato o morals , to speak nothing of a lack o enterprise , in the loading religion dailies of Omaha. But in Friday * Rtjntllican there was a still bolde theft than the transferring of dispatches os , On Thursday evening TUB BE published a piece of editorial mlscel lany credited to the Kansas OU Journal and headed "Union Soldiers. The same article verbatim appearo aa a leading editorial In Friday's Rt uMiean without credit and printed aa rlglnal matter. There Is ono thing erse than stealing slate news , and iat la stealing stale opinion. The ttrald Is atlll one point behind th ( publican as a journalistic froc- > ootor , TOWN "When does the postoffico exit take lace , " oekoda lounger on thoWabash orner of n postal clerk who was tnk- nt ; a lay-off after a western trip , Abont the first of July I think , Tom lall is already getting ruady to pack p his traps and Oontant has ordered now suit and has measured himself or the morocco lined chcir in the ostmaBtor'a offico. Campbell goes , f conruo , but his successor boa not > eon definitely decided upon. I lavou't hoard what other changes are o bo inadu in the working force of the ffico. Woodward will probably bo etalnod because ho la a jewel chief f a clerk and a whole host in himself. ) no of the olerks is pretty certain to go What do I moan by the wink ? A wink s osJgood ] 01 a nod to a blind horflo , " "I didn't moan that you should re port my remarks en the Nobraaka lologatlon and civil norvloo reform , " aid the South Platte politician , aa 10 put on his coat in the 1'jxtoii > owllng alloy and strutted into thn ffico , "still It'j the gospel truth , and Van Wyok won't dany the tacta. If ho whole history of the agonies on- lured dnrlng the late patronage dla- rlbntlon wore only written out it would fill a volnmo. George Smith aya ho don't- care , but aome poopk hlnk it la rather rough that the our- reyor-gonorclship should bo given to a mm who used to think that a thoodo ( to and a theorem wore the same , hlcg , and who can hardly sign hit namu to a voucher drawlnc ila pay. DAVO Stophonaon used to be one of BJBB Cunningham's rlghl lowers , aud was pretty badly mixed up with the old enrvoylng ring , whc BO BUceoMfally meandered the Platte n the daya of Ohauncoy Wlltso's con > .racta Persons who know anything about Nebraska surveying frauds con- tdor it mockery at civil Borvlco re brm that ouch a man should stop into Goo. Smith's shoes when there wat ota of bettor timber south of the 'lalto. But DAVO was a member oi ; ho late legislature , yon know , and lopped from Joe Mlllard to Slander aon on the homo stretch. " "Nothing shows character bettoi ban a subscription list , " Bald a mom- ) or of the board of trade who had ) cou collecting from our merchants 'or the editorial reception. "Afost oi Omaha's business men responded Ibernlly , but several old fikin flints , whoso wealth and dependence upon Dmah.i and Nebraska trade ought to make them relax once and awhile , loaltlvoly refused to help na to the extent of a nlcklo. I wan espcclallj surprised at the gruff refusal of u oadinp ; dry goods merchant whoso Sr. Joe partner ia noted for his llboralltj and public spirit. Perhaps if thi iioad of the Omaha firm was a little less moan in business transactions hii concern might do moro than 20 pm eat. nf thu dry goods trade of thii atate. " "What was the matter with thi Omaha editors , " chipped in anothoi o 111 cor of the board of trade. Botl the Herald and llepublican coomod t < > > a conspicuous by their absence Dr Miller Htrollod in a stately manner In to the Pdxtou on Thursday evening and after elevating hU nose in the al ; left without attempting to assist In on turtalng the guests. The Kepublicai outfit did not put in au appearance However , aa neither of those conoorni deponda upon Omaha for their Inooru they cannot bo expected co take ai overwhelming interest in matter which advertise the city outside o their paid columns and their rallroai patron saints. Besides , as Sidney Dll loa wcs in town , neither ho Republi can ncr Herald dared to say mncl about a railroad excursion which hat 110 oonncotion with the U. P , Thi U , P. being their main feedor.Omahi aa usual gota the cold shoulder whenever over Dillon or his satellites want cole water thrown on any movement "Beatrice is growing rapidly , " sal < ox-Senator A , 8. Paddock the otho evening , as ho sat in the rotunda o the Mlllard , "and I look for a larg bcom In Gage county dnrlng the com ing summer. Wo have been some what cut off from rapid railroad com munloatlon with the rest of the state and that , you know , is always a dlsad vantage. There are indications tha this will bo remedied some tlm in the near future , with thi certain result of greatly Improvln ; the town. Gage county i ono of the best in the state. It I settled up with an excellent class o citizens and peopled with some of thi most efficient farmers In Nebraska The opening up of the Otoo lands wil help us greatly , and I am glad tha the question of the aale hna been final ly aottled. As far as Omaha is concerned corned , " said the senator , tlppiuj back In hia chair , "it is sure to dovoloj in the next ton ycais beyond the ex pectations of any ono of ns , I has the location , aud the outer prise , and the capital wll not bo wanting. I predict i population of 150,000 before 1893 No ; I do not thing property is inflated Compare the priced of our buslnos and residence property with that ii other cities of ita slzs , and it fall greatly below what it ought to bring Five years ago property was at th ebb tide , and people are naturally as tonlshod at the rise that has takei place. As long as addition after ad dition Is opened up and aold almost a fast aa platted , prices are bound t advance. If there ever comes a fal ( n Omaha real estate , it will be a fal from a much higher notch than ha yet been reached , " TIIK bogus cyclone manufacture ! for Omaha by the Herald , and whlcl existed only In the reporter's Imagln atlon , has boon sweeping through tbo astern press and doing moro dam- go abroad thau it did at homo. Such dilations ara injurious to our city end injure ua front a financial and mainosu point of vlow. Omaha has enough disadvantages incident to a young and rapidly growing city with out advertising her aa subject to cyclones , which , in fact , have never laitod ns , and from which wa hope to > o as free in the future as wo have > een In the past. BTA.TH JOTTINGS , An oxoliRDRO nays it is stated n A fact or fanners that the coed of the sunflower g the beat remedy over discovered for the euro of founilor in horses. Immediately on discovering thnt young horioa are foun- Ierr < ) , put about n pint nf the whole peed nto his food , and it will work a perfect euro. It Is rumored that the 13. & M , railroad company will more their repair nhopa 'rum Wymore to Table Hock , and make the Utter place a division nUtlon. It ia nlfo understood that the company will make Beatrice the end of a division on the Tecumich rout * . Hcmf t r competitive eliminations will be the rule inV it Pnlut for teachers in the public echoole. All applicants hare 3een notlfitd to thin effect. The examin ation will take pl co ou th IGth and 17th of July. R A hearer dam has been discovered on West Ur n h , nbont sir miles wont of L'nwooo City , Treei BX In-boi in dlnme- tfr have been out down and the limbs u ed by the be vera in building the dam , The proprietors of the mills nt Mllford , recently burned down , eay the mills will be erected on a more extensive scale than iver , Mtwoda nra now at work laying the foundation walls. The Red Cloud ptople are reported M baving raised the required amount , § 15- , COO , nhlch fccurw building of the C < ntrnl Branch of the U. P. H. II. through the ! ' Lown. Artlclei of incorporation have bten Bled with the lecreUry of utato for the Suttee cre uiery association with A capital itocli of $10,000 , and the Sutton building und Improvement company , capiUl , $5,000 , Nebraika haa one woman minister , one woman lawyer , six women county super Intemlentfl , and ton woman phyticiana , Many women are engaged in edltoria work. The propofed military company talked of at Schvylcr will h vo to bo deferred foi H while , owing to the lack of the necosaarj appropriation on the part of the otato , Th Miller f rtn , ne rPlottsmonth , con < famine G04 areH. waa recently Bold foi $10,0:0. It is laid to bo the heavieat lane sale in that vicinity for some tirno past. The Pratt & Ferris Cattle company and the Converse Cattle company of Vvyonv in ? , have purcliF.ued 2r > ,000 acres of land Ir Boons and PlatU counties. The ceremony of laying the corner stone of the first builaing of Hastings college will take place on the first commencement day , the * < ! Ut of June , Farmers are aid to be making great lucceta of raising oorghutn for fattening hogs. HOPS will eat it , stalk and all , ia preference to coin Frank P. Ireland , of Nebraska City , bn been ralected vice dictator of the supreme lodge of Knights of Honor in the United States , The fourth annual fair of the Pawnee County Agricultural and Mtohinlcal as sociation will be held October 2J , SJ , 4th and 6th , 1883. A Tf orkingmen'a Benevolent and Belie association ha * been organized at Platts- mouth. It haa a charter membership of twenty-five. The Burtonian advl ea the council ol Tekamah to dispose of a portion cf the park and uee the money to build a good jail. jail.An An alleged land buyer , who gave the name of O , Inham , worked n $2,000 bogni draft brt the Platte Valley bank of Centra ! City. City.There's There's a couple of ladles on the Falli City school board , and they made on < of them vice president and the other sec rotary. Crab Orchard is booming , A number o buiinesj nnd residence lota have been soU and a number of building ! are going up. The anli-mcnopolists of Pawnee count ] are organizing and making arrangement ! to bo heard in future campaign * . A cow boy shot the sheriff of ( Keitl county , at Ogallala , recently , but thi wound is reported not dangerous. On account of the Inclemency of thi weather the Jackson races were poatponec until Friday , the lot day of Juuo , Plaindealer-Telegraph : Sidney Is prob ably the only town in the state where tbi liquor law Is not enforced. The B. & M. railroad pakl S7.21S.4 : taxes in Fraaklln county in 1831 am 512,755.45 in 1882. The breed of herans in Johnson count ] is fast improving. The same may be eaii of hogi and cattle. Humboldt baa A comnany whose mail object is to recover stolen articles , Th membership ia fafty. Wolves are reported numerous in the vi einity of Grand Island , and are moklnj war on the sheep. Crete takei pride in b tng law.ablding- the police judge not having a caie in mor than month. One hundred government tents bay been secured for the reunion at Hasting in September. Zi-Qovernor Butler has 1,300 cattle or hit farm in Pawn o county and is bnylni more constantly. A company of fifty national guards ha been formed at Ponca , and is to be arinei with muskets. Wyaore celebrated its second annlvet s ry on the 20th Inst. It has anopulatloi of 1,60. Pawne * City takes considerable prld hi the number and size of her shade treee Stella Is jubilant over the fact that con tracts ore let for throe new brick blocks. Boone county haa adopted a unlforn set * f text books for use In the schools , BFelrmont has discarded salooca am will luppert IU schools in other wayr , TH EDITORS. Their Arrival nnd Reception In Den vor. F.pooli ! Dispatch lo Tui BH. DBMVKK , May 27. The odltorla party Arrived In Denver Saturday a 6 30 a , m. They epont the mornln ) in viowlng the lown and at 2:30 : p. m they visited the exposition bnlldln ; through the courtesy of Mr. T. II Wilson , secretary of the association The manager of the Circle rullroai placed a ( special car ut the disposal o the editors , and ex Senator Tabo and representatives of the Republican Tribune and News accompanied thi party. Mr. Tabor kindly oxtendo ( the courtesies of the Tabor Open honso to the party In order that thoj uilqht witness the charming comedy "Ksmaralda" given by the Madlaoi Square company. Yesterday thi party attended dlvlno service at St John's cathedral en masse , W leave for Pueblo and Leadvillo a 12:30 : a. m , Monday on a special trail via the Denver & Rio Grande railway All are well tnd happy. THE OLD WORLD. GENERAL FOREIGN MOTES. Special DlapMchea to Tun lim. THK AK8UHET1C ! ORCAIl , LONDON , M y 27. Oscar "Wilde dooms to bo plftyod out an an aesthetic poet. Uo worked the art dodge In America for all it wus worth aud has now abandoned It. IIn surprised his friends at a reception given to Mr. Whistler , ( ho artist , by appearing as an ordinary individual , drained in n common-plftco null , nnd shorn of his beautiful iooko. Over hero ho ia re garded aa crazy , ABOUT JOHN BUIOI1T. Ono of the principal topics of itozslp ia the rumored marriage of the Right Hon. John Bright with a slater of his first wife , Mr , Brlght'a friends per- alutenUy deny any Ruoh marrlago as being even contemplated. The con- narrative press , however , .renew the report. Mr. Bright scorns the idea of making a formal dunlal of what ho aya is a scandalous rumor. Mr. 3rlght'a near relntlvoa otato that thla malicious fabrication has been a tar ted ) y partlaani of the law prohibiting mnrrlago with a deceased wife's Bister. Ihoio are throe sisters of Mr. Brlght'a first wife noir living. THE ANAIIOHIST3 PAius.'May 27. Fifteen hundred persona joined luiho anarchist demon stration at the graves of the commu nists in Pore La Ohalao. The red fUg was displayed , and the crowd reined frequent cries of "Vivo la Com- nuno. " Several speeches wore made. Many polloomou wore present but no body was arrested , THE TONQOIN WAK. A dispatch from Saigon , dated yes terday , Bays : Oapt. Riviere was re- connolterine with 400 men , lauding parties from a French vesaol , when attacked. The party was assaulted when 400 kilometres from Hanoi by a strong party of the enemy , principally pirates , and was compelled to retreat. Total Iocs , 20 killed and 51 wounded. Saturday's tele gram giving the number killed and wounded referred only to the loss among the sailors. Troops subse quently reoceuplod the positions. Ad ditional troops are being hnrrled for ward from Saigon aboard merchant vessels. A later dispatch from Saigon says It is generally believed it vlllbo ( nec essary to bombard Hno and send a strong expedition to Tonqnin. The minister of marine sent n tele- pram ordering the governor of Cochin , China , to notify French troops the chamber of deputies has unanimously passed the Tonqnin credit and that Franco will aventje her glorious child ren. Two additional iron clads and a cruiser were ordered to proceed to tb | east directly. THE PUKNCQ DERBY. The grand steeple ohaso Da Paris , handicap , 50,000 francs , and objet d'art , valued at 10,000 francs , for four-year-olds and upwards , distance about G 000 metres ( about three miles and three quarters ) , was run at An- tend to-day and was won by Count Erdody's four-year-old brown goldlug , Too Good ; Dake of Hamilton's Eau Da Nil nocond , and Col. J. Lloyd's Down Patrick third. Twelve ran. Leopold Do Rothschild's Thornfield ll dnrlng the race. MILITARY STATISTICS LONDON , May 20. The Cologne Gazette publishes an article whinh at tracts muoh attention , pointing out that Germany , Austria and Italy can muster 1,318 battalions of infantry , 740 squadrons of cavalry , and 4,404 field guns , while the forces of Franco and Russia amount to 1,339 battalions of Infantry , C20 Hquaarona of cavalry , and 3,840 fields , but it says that the last two states can only operate with divided forces. The Triparitito alli ance can thus ont-woljjh the whole re mainder of Earopo. nUMCRS CONFIRMED. The Times' correspondent at St. Petersburg saya : The rumors that a rupture between Franco and China wore imminent are confirmed. Li Hung Ohitng has boon summoned to take command of the Chinese troops in the province bordering on Tonquln and is daily expected at Shanghai on his way to the now port to begin oper ations. It Is believed that the French minister at Pokin , and the Chinese minister at Paris , will shortly receive their passports. THE TONQUIN EXPEDITION. PARIS , May 2G. In the Chamber of Deputies to-day Bran , minister oi marine , read a telegram from Ton quln stating that fourteen men were killed and thirty wounded in the ser tie. Hauol was surrounded by a numerous force of Annamltes. Two companies of French troops wore sent from Saigon to that plaoo and others will speedily follow. Brnn also announced that transports with troops on board , which were in readiness at Toulon , have been ordered to call for Ton quln. Ho stated that reinforcements would also bo sent to Cochin China. Porln , for the radicals , declared that his party would vote for credit for the Tonquln expedition as it was now necessary to revenge the death of Captain Rlovlero and save the honor of the French nig. Da la Foesp , on the part of tight , made a similar statcmomont. The credit was then carried by n unanimous vote , MINISTRY RESIGNED STOCKHOLM , May 20. The Swedish ministry has resigned in consequence of defeat in the diet on the army or ganization bill. THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN , Relitteiinicurci RHEUMATISM Neuralgia , Scialici , Lunvbigo , BACKACHE , nsiDlCHJ , IOOTSWU , SORE THROAT , QUINSY , Btt ELL1NQS , krineii , CuU , Bnuiu , FROSTBITES. HUHN9 , SCALDI , InJ til otk r nm CKTS i BOTTLI Sollbjr ill Dmutill tat Dttlwi DUKllom U II Uapiifvl * Thi Ciirlu JLVojiler Co. ff iiiiiinm.TmUi > C . ) BtlUmr Kl.C.B.l. H. WESTERMANN & CO , , 1 RiociJEi3sas ; oae * E P China and Glass , ' 608 WASHINGTON AND 609 ST , CHARLES ST , St. Louis , Mo. may 22-3m 223mWIHCOIILIE WIHCOIILIE ] S-A-HLIE ! SAM'L O. DAVIS & CO. , Washington Avenue aud Fifth Street , . . - - . . , ST. JC.Q-P-IS - - - IKEO. -s O. F. GOODMAN , D T AND DEALER IN And Window Glass. OMAHA NEBRASKA. ALEM FLOUR. This Flour la made at Salem , Richardson county , Nob. , in the combined roller and stone system. We give EXCLUSIVE sale of our flour to ono firm in a place. We have opened a branch at 1018 Capitol nvenno , Omaha. VALENTINE & REPPY , M. Hellman & Co , WHOLESALE HIER 1301 and 1303 Farnam St. Cor. I3tH OMAHA , NEB. AKD SETAIL DEALEC UJ Lath , Shingles , Picker.st mt mm § , BLINDS , MgLDracs , um , &ER.EK JMftTiTS ACJU72 JOB lEGWAUEKK CKMSST C Roar Union Pacific Dasofc , MANUFACTURER OF FINE BUGGIES , CARRIAGES & SPRING WAGONS My Repository is Constantly filled with a Select Stock. Bait taciory. 3 , W , Oor. iocn ana uapnoi Avenue , m 3 mke-ly WILLIAM SNYDER , MANDFACTTUBBB OF CARRIAGES , BUGGIES , FiTBt-Olass Painting and Trimming , Repairing Promptly Done , 1321 and 1323 Harney Street , corner Fourteenth Street , Omaha , Neb. ( JrTEI PLANING MILLS. MANU1TAOTDKBR8 OF s Materials ALSO SASH , DOORS , BUMS , Stair Railings , Balusters , Window and Door Frames , Etc. First-cites ivjilitle.3 for the Manufacture of all binds of Moulding * , Planmj naa matching a SpeoUlty. Orders from the ooantrr.will be promptly executed. iddrc iiUcoimnunlcjtIonito A. MOYER , Proprietor The only Coal mined west of the Mississippi Eiver that is eqaa in quality to the ROCK SPRING COAL. THE ONLY IOWA COALV1 That will atock for a year without Blacking or'ahrlnklng. Pronounced by all the leading brick men In Weatorn Iowa KB the very belt coal for burning brick orer rued In the Wool. EUREKA COAL AND MINING CO. , Frederic , Monroe Co. , Iowa.